Tips to create good audio PCBs

Digital tools for electronic work: software for pcb design, schematic drawing, circuit simulation, parts inventory tools, ...
Post Reply
User avatar
Roa
Information
Posts: 33
Joined: 16 May 2008, 15:35
Been thanked: 2 times

Post by Roa »

About a week ago I read something at bogner´s webpage, I think it was a letter written by a Marshall ingenier talking about PCB design when it comes to audio. He claimed that there is acertain way in wich you have to array the components (ones in paralel others perpendicular), distances from components to each others, width of traces and pads and many other things had a significant effect on the quality of the sound and noise reduction. This is the link to the letter

I just can´t find anything specific on those things, so if any of you know has that knowledge I would apreciate you share it with us so that we can then apply it with the design software. This is the most I found:

-If you have to give gain to the signal do it as close to the source as posible.
:hmmm:

User avatar
John Lyons
Solder Soldier
Information
Posts: 191
Joined: 18 Aug 2007, 03:09
Location: West Virginia
Has thanked: 5 times
Been thanked: 30 times

Post by John Lyons »

400v or more Tube amp PCB are a lot different than pedal 9v layouts.
With that much voltage flying around you need to make sure certain points don't interact much.

Basically for any PCB design you want the circuit to flow linearly from one side to the other.
You want high impedance inputs to have short paths from their sources. Short traces and wire runs are always good. There are many other points but for 90% of distortion/fuzz pedals layout isn't crucial at all.


john

User avatar
Supafuzz
Breadboard Brother
Information
Posts: 50
Joined: 04 Jan 2008, 19:19

Post by Supafuzz »

That paper was written by Andy Marshall of THD, no connection to Marshall amps.
It astounds me that so many boutique amp builders feel the need to justify their use of PCBs while just as many others defend rats nests.
Seems like both camps feel insecure about their amps' sound.

Post Reply